Afghanistan‐Pakistan Relations: History and Geopolitics in a Regional and International Context
D. Same Region, Similar Interests: Afghanistan‐Pakistan Relations Today
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afghanistan-pakistan relations
D. Same Region, Similar Interests: Afghanistan‐Pakistan Relations Today To say that the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan today is highly complex is a gross understatement that does not even begin to convey the magnitude and multiple concentric layers of the problem. As the preceding discussion demonstrates, the clash of interests has not simply been one between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Rather, there have been and continue to be various regional and global dimensions to the conflict that complicate hopes for peace even in the long term.
Afghanistan has lived with a grave geopolitical misfortune. Its people and their lands have long existed at the cross‐roads of empires, from Safavid Persia, Shaybani Uzbek and Mughal India, to Tsarist Russia (and later the Soviet Union) and the British Empire in India, not to mention the strategic importance of the
124 Canada too had asked Pakistan to cease its support for the Taliban. Pakistan’s own foreign service was close to revolt on the issue. See Rashid, Descent into Chaos, p. 57. 33 country to the present day US imperium. The Afghan state that was formed at the high noon of classic imperialism unravelled at the dusk of the Cold War when competing alliance systems reduced it to a bloody battlefield. Current geopolitical competition in the region is reason for similar foreboding, particularly as the locus of violence and conflict spreads eastwards, already engulfing Pakistan.
The relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2001 have been well documented. Therefore, they will not be narrated in any great detail here 125
. Rather, this paper will aim to highlight those aspects which still embitter relations between the two countries. Further, as noted above, there can be no thorough review of policies towards Afghanistan and Pakistan without addressing these broader questions that inform their relations and their political and policy implications. Nor can the conflict be understood without highlighting some of the contradictory and/or conflicting regional and international interests involved in Afghanistan and Pakistan at present. It is hoped that this will also be an invitation to experts in these areas to continue to lend their specific knowledge and analysis to these issues.
After some fevered deliberation, Islamabad was relatively prompt in declaring support for Washington in its so called War Against Terror. The decision was not made lightly by the Pakistan military; supporting the Taliban was so important to Pakistan’s security and regional calculations that Musharraf even considered going to war with the United States rather than abandon his allies in Afghanistan 126
. Ultimately, Pakistan assisted the US with facilities and bases as well as the intelligence necessary to win the war in Afghanistan quickly. At the same time, the paucity of ground troops only scattered the Taliban and many elements of al‐Qaeda. Thousands of them escaped into Afghanistan’s rugged mountains and Pakistan’s tribal areas. Many simply returned to their villages and towns, or to refugee camps and madrassahs in Pakistan where they had family and friends waiting. Once in Pakistan or near the border many fighters were also able to rely on clan connections or bribe their way to safety. The ISI, utilizing its assets in Pakistan’s religious political parties, also welcomed many of the demoralized fighters back, saving them for a rainy day.
125
A copious amount of recent literature now exists on the topic. However, Rashid, Descent into Chaos, is highly recommended in this respect. Current up to the spring of 2008, its scope and richness of detail is presently unparalleled. 126
Musharraf, In the Line of Fire, p. 199. Also, Barnett R. Rubin, ‘Saving Afghanistan’, Foreign Affairs, January/February 2007. 34
Pakistan’s panic regarding the new situation in Afghanistan began in November of 2001, when despite US assurances to the contrary, the Northern Alliance forces moved into Kabul. The Alliance had developed close ties to India; its control of Kabul was seen as a profound strategic threat to Pakistan and a complete failure of Pakistan’s costly investment in cultivating the friendly Taliban regime. At the conference in Bonn, Germany, where an interim Afghan government was chosen, the Northern Alliance received the portfolios of most of the important ministries, including defense. Its forces physically controlled these ministries and the US or other allies had little interest in evicting them. Even though a Durrani Pashtun in the form of Hamid Karzai was elected interim president in December 2001, Pashtuns still felt underrepresented in the government.
A Constitution was adopted following a constitutional Loya Jirga in 2004 127 . This
adopted a unitary (as opposed to federal) and presidential form of government, rejecting any formal ethnic representation in state institutions. Thus, the flip side to Pashtun concerns is that the Constitution provides no defense against perceived or actual domination of the state by any one particular ethnic community, which has historically been and is almost certain to again eventually be the Pashtuns. This has led to Afghanistan’s minorities being extremely wary of the present set up as well 128
. Moreover, against Pakistan’s insistence, the defeated and demoralized Taliban were completely left out of any negotiations on the future of Afghanistan when potentially – though this is far from certain – they could have been dictated to from a position of strength.
By 2005, Afghanistan had once again begun to celebrate Pashtunistan Day each August 31. Moreover, in February, 2006, President Hamid Karzai publicly dubbed the Durand Line a “line of hatred” and expressed that he did not accept it as an international border as “it raised a wall between the two brothers.” 129
Pakistani and Afghan troops had already clashed over the disputed border as early as 2003. Anti‐Pakistan protests had followed in Kandahar, Lagman, Mazar‐
127 The official versions of Afghanistan’s 2004 constitution are only available in the Dari and Pashto languages. A high quality unofficial English language translation can be found in Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit, ‘The A to Z Guide to Afghanistan Assistance, Sixth Edition’, February, 2008, p. 68- 99.
128 See Katharine Adeney, ‘Constitutional Design and the Political Salience of ‘Community’ Identity in Afghansitan: Prospects for the Emergence of Ethnic Conflicts in the Post-Taliban Era’, Asian Survey, Vol. 48, Issue 4, (2008) p. 535-57. 129 Afghan News Network Services, ‘Durand Line Serves as a Line of Hate: Karzai’, February 19, 2006. By two brothers he meant the Pashtuns on either side of the border. 35 i‐Sharif, Urozgan and Kabul among other cities. In a seeming repeat of tensions from the 1950s, on July 8, 2003, protestors in Kabul ransacked the Pakistani Embassy, an incident which threatened to escalate into a wider conflict. 130
since 131
.
Pakistan also faced pressure on sealing its border and denying the Taliban sanctuary as early as 2002‐03. The first reported clash between US and Pakistani troops took place then in South Waziristan in this period 132 . It was then that Major Steve Clutter, the then US military spokesperson at the Bagram Base near Kabul, first enunciated the US’s ‘hot pursuit’ policy saying, “the US reserves the right to pursue fleeing Taliban and al‐Qaeda fighters from Afghanistan into Pakistan without Pakistan’s permission. It is a long standing policy, that if we are pursuing enemy forces, we’re not just going to tiptoe and stop right at the border.”
133 Thus, the controversy over recent incursions by US troops into Pakistani territory 134
have been part of the overall nexus of relations and tensions between the two countries since the early days of the latest war in Afghanistan.
A Tripartite Commission involving senior military and diplomatic officials from Afghanistan, Pakistan and the United States was set up in 2003 in an effort to facilitate communication and information sharing to avoid further incidents. Its role has remained purely technical around these lines as opposed to facilitating or being a springboard for broader political dialogue.
By 2006 relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan had sharply deteriorated. The Taliban insurgency had gathered substantial strength in this period 135
. President Karzai publicly accused Pakistan of supporting the insurgency and sheltering insurgent leaders in its cities. President Karzai went so far as to provide a list of names and addresses for alleged Taliban leaders living in Pakistan. Pakistan vehemently denied the charges.
130 Rahimullah Yusufzai, ‘Borderline Story’, The News International, July 30, 2003. 131 See for example Anthony Lloyd, ‘Afghan soldiers mass on the border, ready and willing to take on old foe’, The Times, March 19, 2007. 132
Marc Kaufman, ‘US Reports Clash with Pakistani Border Unit’, Washington Post, January 1, 2003, p. A1.
133 Scott Baldauf, ‘US Hot Pursuit Roils Pakistanis’, Christian Science Monitor, January 6, 2003, p. 6. 134 The Economist, ‘FATA morgana’ and ‘A Wild Frontier’, September 18, 2008. Also, The Economist, ‘Friends Like These’, September 25, 2008. 135
For a good account of the development of the Taliban insurgency see Rashid, Descent into Chaos, particularly at p. 240-261 and 349-373. 36 The situation in Pakistan itself substantially altered in this period. The putschist General Musharraf had assumed the office of President and held parliamentary and provincial elections in 2002. The elections brought the MMA, a coalition of six Islamist parties, into government in the provinces of NWFP and Baluchistan, both of which border Afghanistan. The MMA was also the third largest party in the National Assembly immediately following elections. General Musharraf’s government encouraged defections from the secular opposition parties until it effectively became the official opposition.
The unprecedented success partly capitalized on protest votes as the MMA was the only party resolutely opposed to the invasion of co‐ethnic Afghanistan. This allowed the religious parties to increase their collective share of the popular vote from the usual 5% to about 11% 136
. But they also benefited from severe electoral engineering. This included sidelining the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and the Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz (PML‐N), the two largest parties in Pakistan. Both were led by two former Prime Ministers, Benazir Bhutto and Mian Nawaz Sharif respectively. Both leaders were refused entry into the country, much less allowed to contest elections. Further, opponents were disqualified on the basis of corruption charges or lack of educational credentials 137
. Religious parties were allowed to openly campaign while there were severe restrictions imposed on secular parties. As a result, the election process was sharply criticized by the European Union Observer Mission 138 and termed “deeply flawed” by Human Rights Watch 139
. Contrary to these finding, the US concluded that the election results were “acceptable”; Canada did not utter any protests.
The success of the MMA shored up the traditional alliance between the religious parties and the military and buoyed Musharraf’s rule both domestically and internationally. His gambit largely successful, Musharraf was able to convincingly project himself to an international audience as the only thing standing between the ‘Talibanization’ of Pakistan. The reality was different for most Pakistanis. The mullahs were allowed numerous concessions in return for
136 The historic high for the religious parties was the 1970 election where they gathered 14% of the popular vote. Since then their electoral support had been in terminal decline till 2002. See Owen Bennett Jones, Pakistan: Eye of the Storm (Yale, 2003), p. xvii-xviii. 137
In a country with a chronically low literacy rate, Musharraf brought in a law requiring that anyone running for office must have a university degree. At the same time, he recognized diplomas handed out by any madrassah to be the equivalent of a university degree, thereby effectively exempting most of the religious party leaders from the requirement. 138 European Union Election Observation Mission, Final Report, ‘Pakistan National and Provincial Assembly Election, October 10, 2002’. 139
Human Rights Watch Background Briefing, ‘Pakistan: Entire Election Process Deeply Flawed’, October 9, 2002. 37 supporting Musharraf, his constitutional changes and his government. The military‐supported Islamist provincial governments did much to foster the insurgency in both Afghanistan and Pakistan by sheltering militants, reigning in law enforcement agencies that tried to curb their activities and broadly legitimating their obscurantist ideology 140 . Domestically they were increasingly successful in foisting an ultra‐conservative neo‐fundamentalist agenda through a combination of intimidation, thuggery and popular legislation. Thus, contrary to interntional perceptions, Talibanization occurred at an unprecedented rate largely due to the government’s cynical patronage.
Further, Musharraf’s rule also saw the re‐ignition of a burgeoning nationalist insurgency in Baluchistan. Baluchistan also shares a border with some of the most volatile areas of Afghanistan, namely the provinces of Helmand and Kandahar. Thus, the insurgency there not only taxed the Pakistani military but also presented numerous exploitable opportunities for the Taliban 141 .
By 2005, the Taliban insurgency had already become cross‐border and was equally active on either side 142
. It now included the so called ‘Pakistani Taliban’. Large swathes of territory in FATA, the NWFP and Baluchistan slipped out of control of the Pakistani government and were converted into mini versions of Afghanistan under the Taliban. Even the suburbs of the city of Peshawar, capital of the NWFP, were thus Talibanized. Moreover since 2007 a campaign of suicide and conventional bombings have terrorized all of Pakistan’s cities, killing hundreds if not thousands 143
. Not even Islamabad, the country’s capital, has been spared. The insurgency has turned into Pakistan’s Frankenstein’s Monster; it can no longer delude itself into thinking that it still controls the actors or that it is insulated or contained in the lawless border areas away from the Pakistani heartlands. It now presents a palpable threat to the state 144
.
140
For an excellent report on this issue, see International Crisis Group, ‘Pakistan: The Mullahs and the Military’, Asia Report No. 49, March 20, 2003. 141 For a good report on the Baluchistan crisis, see International Crisis Group, ‘Pakistan: The Worsening Conflict in Baluchistan’, Asia Report No. 119, September 14, 2006. 142
Rubin and Siddique, ‘Resolving the Afghanistan-Pakistan Stalemate’. 143
In 2007 there were more suicide bombings in Pakistan than all previous years combined. There were 71 suicide blasts that killed 927 persons. This does not include other types of bombings and attacks across the country. See Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, ‘State of Human Rights in 2008’, p. 65. 144
For a good account of the rise of extremism and militancy in Pakistan see Rashid, Descent into Chaos, Zahid Hussain, Frontline Pakistan: The Struggle with Militant Islam (Columbia, 2007), and Hassan Abbas, Pakistan’s Drift into Extremism: Allah, the Army and America’s War on Terror (M.E. Sharpe, 2005), particularly p 201-241. 38
Pakistan has many apologists that insist that the growing insurgency in Afghanistan has little to do with it and everything to do with the occupation of Afghanistan and bad governance under President Hamid Karzai. Others say that it is difficult for an army to fight its own people and therefore, the military has failed to subdue the Pakistani Taliban. Then there are those that claim Pakistan is a duplicitous ally that publicly condemns the Taliban while privately assisting them. Still other claim that Pakistan simply does not have the military capability to pacify its restive border areas and the insurgency that rages therein. There are elements of truth and myth‐making in all these positions.
The Pakistani military has historically been more adept at suppressing – usually very brutally – insurgencies by its compatriots than it has been at fighting external threats. It has done so in Baluchistan in the 1940s, 1950s, 1970s and then from 2003 to 2008. It was also vicious in its suppression of an uprising in rural Sind in the late 1980s and in the province’s first city of Karachi in the 1990s. Its brutality was unmatched in 1971 when it committed genocide against the Bengalis and was more or less on track for extinguishing the rebellion prior to Indian intervention. Thus, explanations relying on the assertion that Pakistan’s military does not have the stomach to fight its own people, or that it does not possess sufficient expertise in dealing with asymmetric warfare does not hold water historically – even providing for the virtual revolution in asymmetric warfare tactics following the occupation in Iraq.
What distinguishes the present insurgency from previous ones, including the one in Baluchistan which the military has fought simultaneously? Clan and kinship ties may have played some role in the military’s initial lackadaisical performance. Many of Pakistan’s frontier paramilitary forces share not only ethnic but also blood ties with the Pashtun Taliban fighters. This situation has been remedied recently by moving ethnic Punjabi troops into the frontier regions.
But the main distinction has less to do with fighting fellow citizens than with the difficulty in squaring the ideological dimensions of the insurgency. The Taliban consider and proclaim themselves to be jihadis or mujahideen and are garbed in the cloak of Islamic legitimacy. Pakistan is itself an ideological state with a confused national identity tied in with Islam. It has for decades lionized – and sometimes idealized – the struggle for a puritan Islamic state in Afghanistan. The challenge now is that the Pakistani Taliban and their vocal sympathizers are proving increasingly adept at appropriating the Pakistani state’s discourse of
39 legitimacy resting in its Islamic credentials and recasting it in a radical mould. Thus, ideationally it is now extremely difficult to re‐characterize this subverted discourse as illegitimate, terroristic or even anti‐state.
It is this dimension of the insurgency that is potentially the most damaging to Pakistan in the long‐run as it requires a more comprehensive and long‐term social solution than a mere military campaign within a particular time and space. Despite the dramatic increase in suicide bombings and sectarian and terror attacks in Pakistan, many Pakistanis are still unsure about the fight against the Taliban and al‐Qaeda and continue to regard it only as America’s proxy war. This is evidenced by the recent parliamentary resolution that calls for an immediate halt to military operations without calling on the Taliban to do the same
145 . Thus, posing effective ideological and ideational opposition to the Taliban will require carefully crafting a social consensus not only on what must be done at present to stem the rising tide of extremism but also on the symbolic signifiers of the Pakistani state, particularly on its foundational myths and on the ways in which Islam is to play a role in its public sphere (or not). Such a consensus will prove difficult given a Pakistani polity increasingly fragmented along political, class, ethnic, sectarian, religious and urban/rural lines. Regardless, initiating a sustained public dialogue on these issues is crucial, particularly now when the elections of February, 2008 have inflicted a crushing defeat on the radical parties 146
and have provided the government with a democratic mandate.
Notwithstanding, Pakistan has undertaken earnest military efforts to keep the threat manageable, and its nuclear and human assets (i.e., pro‐Pakistan Taliban) safe from external action. It has set up more than 1000 checkpoints on its side of the border, as compared to less than 200 on the Afghan side. It has deployed up to 110,000 troops on its border and lost over 3000, far more than the number of troops deployed on the Afghan side of the border 147
.
145 Hasan-Askari Rizvi, ‘Blind to the Threat’, The Daily Times, October 26, 2008. 146 The MMA secured only 7 seats in the 342 seat National Assembly with some of the leaders of its component parties also losing their seats. See Election Commission of Pakistan, available online at http://www.ecp.gov.pk/NAPosition.pdf (accessed October 2, 2008). 147
For Pakistani losses, see Rizvi, ‘Blind to the Threat’. There are presently 50,700 troops as part of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. This includes Canada’s contingent. There are an additional 7000 troops as part of the US Operation Enduring Freedom. These are outside of ISAF/NATO command and are deployed to hunt down al-Qaeda. The Afghan National Army (ANA) currently stands at a strength of about 86,000. Thus, active troops in all of Afghanistan come to 143,700. Most of them are not deployed by the border. 40 Recently, the Pakistani military has pursued more aggressive and increasingly successful actions against the militants in its Bajaur Agency, described as a “crucial hub” and the “centre of gravity” for the Taliban insurgents. The action saw hundreds of Taliban fighters pouring over the border from Afghanistan to reinforce their comrades in Pakistan 148 . The military has been confronting and repelling attacks in Bajaur itself but has been unable to keep the Taliban restricted to the Afghan side of the border. Nor, of course, have foreign troops based in Afghanistan or the Afghan National Army (ANA) been able to prevent Taliban fighters from crossing the border and joining the fray in Pakistan. This demonstrates the limits of Pakistan – and Afghanistan – to effectively seal or manage the porous border.
Moreover, it is naïve to imagine that there is an ‘off switch’ for the insurgency somewhere in Islamabad. The ‘Taliban’ appellation no longer applies merely to the movement that seized power in Kabul back in 1996. The movement is now sorely fragmented, decentralized and
remains regionalized and internationalized. It incorporates neo‐fundamentalists, Islamists, other militants and terrorists, as well as drug barons, criminals, spoilers vying for local power and the destitute fighting for some semblance of a regular pay cheque 149 . As the vicious Taliban insurgency within Pakistan itself shows, Pakistan does not control all the various strands of the renewed movement or its multifarious radical affiliates and has little influence over them. In the words of a prominent scholar on the subject, Pakistani intelligence agencies have “no clue” as to the numerous fragmented, loosely affiliated, networked or even competing radical organizations in Pakistan 150 . This is demonstrated by the fact that when over forty different militant groups in the NWFP and FATA banded together as the Tehrik‐e‐Taliban under the leadership of Baitullah Mehsud, the ISI only found out after the fact 151
.
But this is not to say that Pakistan does not control some Taliban commanders and fighters; indeed it does and has used them against both Afghanistan and India. Thus, it is also important to recognize that not only is Pakistan unable to
148
Barbara Plett, ‘Pakistan Villagers Take on the Taleban’, BBC News, September 29, 2008, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7641538.stm (accessed September 29, 2008). 149
For an excellent on the ground study, see Surendrini Wijeyaratne, ‘Afghanistan: A Study on the Prospects for Peace Discussion Paper’, Canadian Council for International Cooperation, p. 6. Also see International Crisis Group, ‘Countering Afghanistan’s Insurgency: No Quick Fixes’, Asia Report No. 123, November 2, 2006. 150 Conversation with Hassan Abbas, a Research Fellow at Harvard University and a leading authority on security issues and extremist groups in Pakistan. 151
Rashid, Descent into Chaos, p. 386. 41 control the border and reign in all the militants, it is also – to the extent that it can – unwilling to do so. Pakistan hopes to keep the areas in a state of controlled chaos whereby its Taliban intelligence assets, such as the Haqqani father and son team, are preserved to be utilized to expand influence into both Afghanistan and India. The ‘control’ in this chaos comes in its targeting of foreign (i.e. non‐Afghan and Pakistani) fighters and those Taliban commanders, such as Baitullah Mehsud, Mangal Bagh or Maulana Fazalullah (more popularly known as Maulana Radio for his skill in setting up pirate radio stations), that are bent on fighting the Pakistani state. The control, however, is often illusory and threatens to get entirely lost amidst the chaos.
The questions thus are: why is Pakistan unwilling to fight all the Taliban and why does it maintain its links with some of them? A cynical though not entirely unreasonable view holds that the insurgency has been good for Pakistan, and particularly its military managers. The Pakistani military under Musharraf benefited immensely from the at least $10 billion, and perhaps as much as $20 billion, in aid provided to Pakistan 152
. Most of this aid went to the military 153
. Without the ongoing turmoil in Pakistan and the border areas the Pakistani military stands to lose a lucrative revenue stream. 154
No doubt this plays some role in Pakistan’s approach to the Taliban insurgency, just as its carefully calibrated support for the Mujahideen prolonged the war against the Soviets by keeping it at a low intensity. But the economic motive for the military is overly simplistic and fails to explain the entire scenario. Tactical motives aside, Pakistan’s strategic objectives in the region have remained the same even when it was completely isolated from US largesse in the 1990s. Though Pakistan no doubt realizes that US engagement in the region has given it the opportunity to build its military capability vis a vis India, its strategy is a continuation of gaining leverage in Afghanistan and building up the military security against India that it has pursued since the 1970s.
Pakistan is motivated by the desire to have a friendly government in Kabul that it can exercise some influence with. Pakistan needs this to be able to expand
152
in addition to the $10 billion in overt funds Pakistan received another $10 billion in covert funds as well. See Amitabh Pal, ‘The Wrong Side in Pakistan’, The Progressive, February, 2008.
153
About 1% of the funds were earmarked for development and 3% for border security. 96% were utilized for building up the military, including expensive purchases of advanced weapons systems. The figures come from Robert Miller of the Parliamentary Centre. See Mike Blanchfield, ‘Pakistan’s Plight the focus of Ottawa Conference’, Canwest News Service, October 16, 2008. 154 For this argument see Dexter Filkins, ‘Right at the Edge’, New York Times Magazine, September 7, 2008. Available online at http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/07/magazine/07pakistan- t.html?_r=1&ei=5070&emc=eta1&oref=slogin (Accessed September 15, 2008). 42 political and trade ties with the Central Asian Republics and to keep Afghanistan’s irredentist Pashtunistan claims in check. Most importantly, however, Pakistan’s managers, and particularly its military that still controls its defence and foreign policies, are concerned with the perceived threat from India. Pakistan is a security state defined by its ideational opposition to India. The Pakistani military remains obsessed with the idea of gaining strategic depth against India. Its worst nightmare remains an Afghanistan friendly to and dominated by its arch‐nemesis. Therefore, Delhi’s growing influence in Kabul has been causing panic in Islamabad.
Indeed, India’s ties with Afghanistan are partly aimed at disrupting Pakistan’s security calculations. Pakistan continues to pursue a proxy war of varying intensity against India in Kashmir. This ‘death by a thousand cuts’ has the dual purpose of maintaining pressure on India to ultimately come to a settlement on Kashmir, and also to keep a substantial portion of the Indian military tied up in the Himalayan region, thereby reducing its strike capability against the rest of Pakistan. In the minds of military planners, this tactic gives Pakistan a ‘force equalizer’ against the much larger and more advanced Indian military. However, by strengthening its position in Afghanistan, India is countering Pakistan’s long standing proxy tactics. An Afghanistan that is stable, adding to its military strength and increasingly (and justifiably) resentful of Pakistan would turn the tables. If India can not utilize its full military capability because of Kashmir, the thinking goes, then Pakistan can not utilize it because of Afghanistan. It is within this framework that Pakistan views and processes reports that India may provide training to the Afghan National Army (ANA) 155 , as well as recently announced plans of increasing the projected strength of the ANA from 80,000 to 134,000 156
. Many, including Afghan Defence Minister Abdul Wardak, argue that it should be much larger still 157
. Therefore, it has received the news of the increase in
155 India Defence, ‘India to Train Afghanistan, Uzbekistan armed forces’, April 24, 2007. Available online at http://www.e- ariana.com/ariana/eariana.nsf/allDocs/53AF0A109DA7602E872572C700687F76?OpenDocument
(Accessed September 15, 2008). 156 Sean McCormick, US Department of State, Press Statement: ‘Afghanistan National Army Expansion’, September 10, 2008. Available online at http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/sept/109449.htm (Accessed September 17, 2008). 157 CBC News, ‘Defence Minister says Afghan Army must be 5 times larger’, July 12, 2006. Available online at http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2006/07/12/afganistan12072006.html#skip300x250 (Accessed September 15, 2008). Also see The Economist, ‘A Surge of Pessisimism’, October 16, 2008. The Defence Minister has argued for an army of 150,000-200,000. The Economist article argues expanding the ANA in line with Iraq, which has a projected military strength of 260,000. It also has 250,000 police as compared to 80,000 in Afghanistan. Further, Iraq also has a well funded 100,000 strong pro-government Sunni tribal militia. Iraq is both smaller and less populous than Afghanistan. 43 militarization in Afghanistan with much trepidation 158 – and it is not the only country in the region to have done so.
In contrast to Pakistan’s influence exercised through madrassahs and militants, India is making investments in Afghanistan that, in the long term, are aimed at cultivating and cementing its ties with the Afghan elites of tomorrow. These include economic aid, infrastructural development and educational ties. Pakistan has been outmanoeuvred but has been slow to adapt or alter its policies accordingly.
However, there is also a dark side to Indian involvement in Afghanistan that is often ignored or written off to a mix of Pakistani paranoia and propaganda. This is the building of a dam on the Kunar river in northern Afghanistan. This would provide much needed electricity to Afghanistan. However, the river flows (via the Kabul River) into the Indus at Attock. In Pakistan’s view, the Kunar dam would have serious ramifications for its water supply 159
. Further, its construction comes amid ongoing disputes between India and Pakistan over the use of water resources and a dam on the Chenab River 160
.
More disturbing still India funds and supports training camps for Pakistani Baluch insurgents in southern Afghanistan 161
. The latest rebellion raged from 2003 to recently in 2008 when the main insurgent groups declared a cease‐fire 162 .
Thus, it seems Afghanistan has reprised its role of support to Baluch militiants and proxy intervention in Pakistan – albeit at a lesser intensity than Pakistan is able to muster against it – while India has found its opportunity to give Pakistan a taste of its own medicine.
158 See for example, Najmuddin A Shaikh, ‘Any Pluses for Afghanistan?’, Daily Times, September 5, 2008. 159 Robert D. Kaplan, ‘Behind the Indian Embassy Bombing’, The Atlantic, August 1, 2008, available online at http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200808u/kaplan-pakistan (Accessed October 5, 2008). 160
Masood Haider and Anwar Iqbal, ‘Water Issue to be resolved: Singh: Indus Treaty to Provide Guidance, Dawn Internet Edition, September 25 2008, available online at http://www.dawn.com/2008/09/26/top3.htm
(Accessed September 25, 2008). 161 Pakistan’s inability to draw attention to this fact strongly suffers from ‘the boy that cried wolf’ syndrome. Its enthusiasm in blaming outsiders – and most often and particularly India – for all its woes leeches its credibility even when the allegations hold water. A number of learned commentators have alluded to India and Afghanistan’s support for Baluch insurgents. See, for example, Rubin and Siddique, ‘Resolving the Afghanistan-Pakistan Stalemate’. Further, a renowned journalist based in Pakistan and Afghanistan also advised me of credible, if as yet unconfirmed, reports on this issue. The journalist requested to stay anonymous pending the publication of the story. 162
Daily Times, ‘Baloch Ceasefire is Welcome’, September 6, 2008. 44 That such intense rivalry is occurring between ostensible Western allies while tens of thousands of troops are stationed in the region is a troubling portent. At the very least, the present strategies are failing to bring lasting peace and security to the region and are contributing to its militarization. This also demonstrates the limits of Western – even imperial – power to superimpose its own interests onto related states without regard for underlying and longstanding regional interests. As a result, a hegemonic agenda can not simply be transcribed onto the region without feeding the kind of turmoil that we are presently witnessing. The mutual animus between Afghanistan, Pakistan and India has lasted a long time. If the current course is followed without involving the entire region in an open dialogue, this turmoil will likely far outlast Western involvement in Afghanistan. E. Regional Cooperation or Towards a New Cold War?
As we have seen, both Pakistan and India are using Afghanistan as a proxy battlefield. Afghanistan, the weakest of the three countries, is certainly a victim in the circumstances, but not an entirely passive or blameless one. Further, they are not the only countries that are exploiting Afghanistan to pursue their own
had been built by the US in support of its invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 is now unravelling, a victim of geopolitics and suspicions over its long‐term goals and motivations in the country. To states in the region Afghanistan resembles more and more an expansion of the US imperium.
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In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, Russia had proposed to accept US “global leadership” if the US allowed it “hegemonic responsibility for the former Soviet Union.” 163 Offered from a position of weakness, the proposal was rejected by Washington which planned to establish military bases in Central Asia to support the war in Afghanistan. It also hoped that the bases would be ‘enduring’, projecting US influence in the region the extending it to Russia’s south eastern borders, as the extension of NATO already inched towards its western borders 164
. By 2005, however, as the US got increasingly bogged down in Iraq, Russia was once again acting like a great power and expanding its alliances
163
Malik, US Relations with Afghanistan and Pakistan, p. xii. 164
On the spread of US bases in the region and across the globe, see Chalmers Johnston, The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy and the End of the Republic (Metropolitan Books, 2004). 45 in the region. It has conducted joint military exercises with China and India. It squarely rejected imposing sanctions on Iran for its uranium enrichment activities and has publicly decided to remain neutral in any future US‐Iran war 165
. As in Soviet times, it had also made attempts to take over supplying and training the ANA, though the recent boost in US aid to Afghanistan is presumably meant to ward off this development. Given the rising rancor between the US and Russia, if it views the growing ANA as a threat, Afghanistan may once again turn into a proxy battlefield between the two powers.
Iran too, under the moderate leadership of Mohammad Khatami, had offered its support in containing the Taliban and securing the border. Instead of fostering this regional cooperation, Iran was added to the list of the so‐called Axis of Evil. It views the possibility of ‘enduring’ bases in Afghanistan as well as the planned increase in the size of the ANA with considerable and reasonable suspicion. Since 2003 it has had to live with US troops on both its eastern and western (Iraq) borders while relations between the two countries have considerably worsened. It has few good options ahead in Afghanistan, as long as the existing choices remain a government allied with the US with unprecedented military strength in manpower and equipment, or the Pakistan/Saudi Arabia aligned and rabidly anti‐Shia Taliban that attacked and killed its consular staff in 1990s. Without a third option in Afghanistan, Iran is likely to continue hedging its bets, with some factions within its security establishment contributing to the ongoing chaos in Afghanistan.
However, it is China that is proving the major magnet for shifting interests in the region. Soon after the election of President George W. Bush, the US redefined China from “strategic partner” to “strategic competitor”. This was in keeping with US defence doctrines aimed at pre‐empting and preventing the re‐ emergence of a new rival for global power, preventing any hostile power from becoming a regional hegemon and maintaining a mechanism for deterring potential competitors aspiring to a larger regional or global role. China fit squarely within the doctrine.
Part of this re‐qualification included luring New Delhi into accepting a leading role in the new US strategy for containing China 166
. India and the US have moved considerably closer since then, exacerbating strains in the US‐Pakistan relationship. The recent unprecedented nuclear deal between the US and India
165 In real terms this means Russia will continue supplying Iran with weapons, including sophisticated air defence missiles. 166
Gwynne Dyer, ‘Containing China’, The Walrus, October 2005. 46 that accepts the latter as a legitimate member of the nuclear club is an indication of the importance the US ascribes this budding alliance 167
. This is leading to further nuclearization of South Asia. China recently agreed to provide Pakistan with two more nuclear reactors. Publicly the reason is to address Pakistan’s acute energy crisis. The real reason is to restore some modicum of balance to the geopolitical power equation in South Asia that the comprehensive US‐India deal had disturbed 168 .
In this context, China too sees a lingering US presence in Afghanistan and Central Asia, as well as the steadily strengthening ANA as a threat. It is obviously wary of a US strategy of containment and strategic encirclement. It perceives Afghanistan as a plank in an encirclement strategy that also includes India among other countries. China’s concerns are not aided by a feeling of déjà vu, having seen a similar encirclement attempted by the former Soviet Union. Pakistan is the wild‐card for China. The two countries share an “all‐weather friendship” and this is likely to continue; however China is not presently in a position to replace US generosity in terms of military, civil and financial aid. However, China has continued to court Pakistan as a large donor of military hardware and has assisted Pakistan in a number of strategic projects, including a new port at Gwador in Baluchistan. It has also begun to seek pre‐emptive counter‐alignments with Russia and Iran, and has improved and increased ties with Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, in addition to Pakistan, almost certainly to secure its position against India. However, China is also concerned about the chaos in Afghanistan and destabilization and Talibanization in Pakistan as reports begin to emerge about rebels in the Xingjian province finding sanctuary and training facilities in Pakistan’s border areas.
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Thus, a prolonged Western military presence in Afghanistan is slowly leading to the opposite of establishing peace and stability in the region. It is exacerbating regional tensions and contributing to its increased militarization. But despite the deliberately provocative title of this section, it is as yet doubtful that this will lead
167 On this issue see Esther Pan and Jaysharee Bajoria, ‘Backgrounder: The US-India Nuclear Deal’, Council on Foreign Relations. Available online at http://www.cfr.org/publication/9663/ (Accessed October 20, 2008). 168 Matthew Rosenberg, ‘Pakistan Secures China’s Help to Build 2 Nuclear Reactors’, The Wall Street Journal, October 20, 2008. Available online at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122445373748048283.html?mod=googlenews_wsj (Accessed October 20, 2008).
47 to a new Cold War or even a classic arms race in the near future. However, a pair of opposing alliances led by the US and China will likely emerge 169
. The multi‐ layered relations between countries in the region are largely interest based. Russia and China still have their many differences. India does not desire a conflict with China, and vice versa, as both countries understand that this would be devastating to their emerging economies. Thus, India and China have been putting out feelers aimed at better bilateral relations as well. However, both are historical competitors. Further, the history of the region shows that there is a possibility of regional and international conflagrations stemming from the plethora of interests and particularly the involvement of big powers and veritable empires.
Therefore, any road that seeks to diffuse the tension and leads to peace goes through increased regional cooperation. Hence, an earnest and honest dialogue is required on the situation in both Pakistan and Afghanistan that brings all regional players and the countries presently involved in the occupation of Afghanistan to the negotiating table under the auspices of the UN. As this section hopes to demonstrate, the conflicts in Afghanistan and Pakistan and across the region have important transnational dimensions. Their solutions must be the same.
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As a prologue to this section, it is useful to consider that Pakistan has often been described as a “pivotal state”, meaning a country “whose fates would significantly affect regional, even international stability.” 170 Peace, stability and prosperity in the country would have a knock‐on multiplier effect throughout the region. I suggest Afghanistan is in a similar position. Once a cross‐roads between East and West, between Asian and Europe through the fabled Silk Route, Afghanistan can once again be an important route for trade and energy. Thus, to create an enabling environment where this can be achieved needs to be an urgent policy priority.
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